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CS640: Introduction to Computer Networks

CS640: Introduction to Computer Networks. Aditya Akella Lecture 21 - Multimedia Networking. Application Classes. Typically sensitive to delay, but can tolerate packet loss (would cause minor glitches that can be concealed)

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CS640: Introduction to Computer Networks

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  1. CS640: Introduction to Computer Networks Aditya Akella Lecture 21 - Multimedia Networking

  2. Application Classes • Typically sensitive to delay, but can tolerate packet loss (would cause minor glitches that can be concealed) • Data contains audio and video content (“continuous media”), three classes of applications: • Streaming stored content • Unidirectional Real-Time • Interactive Real-Time

  3. Application Classes (more) • Streaming stored content • Clients request audio/video files from servers and pipeline reception over the network and display • Interactive: user can control operation (similar to VCR: pause, resume, fast forward, rewind, etc.) • Streaming  start playing before all content arrives • Continuous playout: some delivery constraints

  4. Application Classes (more) • Unidirectional Real-Time: • similar to existing TV and radio stations, but delivery on the network • Non-interactive, just listen/view • Interactive Real-Time: • Phone conversation or video conference • More stringent delay requirement than Streaming and Unidirectional because of real-time nature • Video: < 150 msec acceptable • Audio: < 150 msec good, <400 msec acceptable

  5. Streaming Applications • Important and growing application • Due to reduction of storage costs, increase in high speed net access from homes and enhancements to caching • Audio/Video file is segmented and sent over either TCP or UDP • Public segmentation protocol: Real-Time Protocol (RTP) • User Interaction: Real-time Streaming protocol (RTSP)

  6. Streaming • Helper Application:displays content, which is typically requested via a Web browser; e.g. RealPlayer; typical functions: • Decompression • Jitter removal • Error correction: use redundant packets to be used for reconstruction of original stream • GUI for user control

  7. Streaming From Web Servers • Audio: in files sent as HTTP objects • Video (interleaved audio and images in one file, or two separate files and client synchronizes the display) sent as HTTP object(s) • A simple architecture is to have the Browser request the object(s) and after their reception pass them to the player for display - No pipelining

  8. Streaming From Web Server • Alternative: set up connection between server and player, then download • Web browser requests and receives a Meta File (a file describing the object) instead of receiving the file itself; • Browser launches the appropriate Player and passes it the Meta File; • Player sets up a TCP connection with Web Server and downloads the file

  9. Using a Streaming Server • This gets us around HTTP, allows use of UDP vs. TCP and the application layer protocol can be better tailored to Streaming; many enhancements options are possible … Separateout functionality

  10. Options When Using a Streaming Server • UDP: Server sends at a rate (Compression and Transmission) appropriate for client; to reduce jitter, Player buffers initially for 2-5 seconds, then starts display • Use TCP, and sender sends at maximum possible rate under TCP; retransmit when error is encountered; Player uses a much large buffer to smooth delivery rate of TCP

  11. Real Time Streaming Protocol (RTSP) • For user to control display: rewind, fast forward, pause, resume, etc… • Out-of-band protocol (uses two connections, one for control messages (Port 554) and one for media stream) • As before, meta file is communicated to web browser which then launches the Player; • Meta file contains “presentation description file” which has information on the multi-media content

  12. Presentation Description Example <title>Xena: Warrior Princess</title> <session> <group language=en lipsync> <switch> <track type=audio e="PCMU/8000/1" src = "rtsp://audio.example.com/xena/audio.en/lofi"> <track type=audio e="DVI4/16000/2" pt="90 DVI4/8000/1" src="rtsp://audio.example.com/xena/audio.en/hifi"> </switch> <track type="video/jpeg" src="rtsp://video.example.com/twister/video"> </group> </session>

  13. RTSP Operation • C: SETUP rtsp://audio.example.com/xena/audio RTSP/1.0 Transport: rtp/udp; compression; port=3056; mode=PLAY • S: RTSP/1.0 200 1 OK Session 4231 • C: PLAY rtsp://audio.example.com/xena/audio.en/lofi RTSP/1.0 Session: 4231 Range: npt=0- (npt = normal play time) • C: PAUSE rtsp://audio.example.com/xena/audio.en/lofi RTSP/1.0 Session: 4231 Range: npt=37 • C: TEARDOWN rtsp://audio.example.com/xena/audio.en/lofi RTSP/1.0 Session: 4231 • S: 200 3 OK

  14. Real-Time Protocol (RTP) • Provides standard packet format for real-time application • Application-level; Typically runs over UDP • Specifies header fields for identifying payload type, detecting packet loss, accounting for jitter etc. • Payload Type: 7 bits, providing 128 possible different types of encoding; eg PCM, MPEG2 video, etc.

  15. Real-Time Protocol (RTP) • Timestamp: 32 bytes; gives the sampling instant of the first audio/video byte in the packet; used to remove jitter introduced by the network • Sequence Number: 16 bits; used to detect packet loss

  16. Real-Time (Phone) Over IP’s Best-Effort • Internet phone applications generate packets during talk spurts • Bit rate is 8 Kbytes/s, and every 20 msec, the sender forms a packet of ~160 Bytes • The coded voice information is encapsulated into a UDP packet and sent out • Packets may be arbitrarily delayed or lost • When to play back a chunk? • What to do with a missing chunk?

  17. Removing Jitter • Decision on when to play out a chunk affected by network “jitter” • Variation in queueing delays of chunks • One option: ignore jitter and play chunks as and when they arrive • Can become highly unintelligible, quickly • But jitter can be handled using: • sequence numbers • time stamps • delaying playout

  18. Fixed Playout Delay • Trade-off between lost packets and large delays • Can make play-out even better with “adaptive play-out”

  19. Recovery From Packet Loss • Loss interpreted in a broad sense: packet never arrives or arrives later than its scheduled playout time • Since retransmission is inappropriate for Real Time applications, FEC or Interleaving are used to reduce loss impact and improve quality • FEC is Forward Error Correction • Simplest FEC scheme adds a redundant chunk made up of exclusive OR of a group of n chunks • Can reconstruct if at most one lost chunk • Redundancy is 1/n, bad for small n • Also, play out delay is higher

  20. Another FEC Mechanism • Send a low resolution audio stream as redundant information • Upon loss, playout available redundant chunk • Albeit a lower quality one • With one redundant low quality chunk per chunk, scheme can recover from single packet losses

  21. Piggybacking Lower Quality Stream

  22. Interleaving • Divide 20 msec of audio data into smaller units of 5 msec each and interleave • Upon loss, have a set of partially filled chunks • Has no redundancy, but can cause delay in playout beyond Real Time requirements

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